The Amazing Randi is somewhat famous for One Million Dollar Paranormal Challenge - Wikipedia.The difficulty with using reports of miracles as evidence for supernatural is that in most cases the miracle is in the way a NATURAL occurrence satisfies some need at just the right time. For example, there was a ghost story where a person did not have money to buy cigarettes but in stopping the car a bunch of old coins came sliding out of the headliner into his lap which allowed him to buy the cigarettes. If the coins had simply slid out of the headliner at some random time and without a need for coins then it would have seemed more mundane. Although that example is a ghost story, Christian reports of miracles are often the same - natural occurrences that satisfy some need at just the right time and often after requesting help from God. It seems that these types of miracles are very hard to confirm as supernatural.
However, there are reports of miracles that would seem supernatural. For example, there are ghost stories where objects such as cutlery fly across the room and are witnessed by multiple people. Similarly there is at least one story of a Christian in Africa returning to life after being dead for several days. Why is there never any evidence for these things? Or maybe there is evidence, but we simply prefer to ignore it because it makes us uncomfortable to take these reports seriously?
A final factor is psychology. Some people imagine things or hallucinate things. Then there are unscrupulous people who exaggerate reports to make the books they write sell better. Or similarly preachers who want to whip their parish into a frenzy of tithing with some uplifting story of a miracle. Hate to be cynical, but it almost seems that nobody takes contemporary reports of miracles and supernatural seriously enough to investigate carefully. Why? Do we subconsciously know they are all bunk or do we subconsciously worry that they might overturn our comfortable ideas about reality? I think a lot of Christians are just as skeptical as atheists when the topic is contemporary reports of miracles and supernatural. They believe Moses parted the Red Sea, but they don't believe God does things like that today. That is why they always want to talk about philosophy and cosmology instead of an active God today.
The point here is that if such a thing is real it should be demonstrable under controlled conditions. If you "see" what card I'm holding on a stage, if it were real magic, you should be able to do it in a lab. And yet, it never is.
Humans want to be fooled. Some of it's fun. Some of it is nefarious. Even my middle name challenge wouldn't really prove the supernatural. It may be that my interlocutor is simply a very good hacker. Failure to come up with my middle name wouldn't disprove the supernatural either. But if one came up with it, it'd be something rather than nothing. How about go on national TV and make Joe Biden 20 years younger. Why not turn the Sahara into a rain forest? Even healing everyone in a hospital would make nearly everyone else sit up and take notice.
But these things never happen. Just people bumping into tables in a dark house.
Upvote
0